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Business Digest: HEC Paris’s preferred partner

The annual publication, Knowledge@HEC2016, produced in association with Business Digest, is out. It revisits a year of research and reflection at HEC Paris in marketing, finance, strategy, management, and more.

The new edition covers subjects as varied as conformism and originality in strategy, activist influence, decision making and uncertainty, risk estimation, knowledge and creativity or sociology.

Starting this year, Knowledge@HEC has expanded to Qatar with an issue produced specifically for HEC Paris in Doha. Further proof that management research is becoming increasingly important to any country that wants to make knowledge a key success factor for economic dynamism.

What is Knowledge@HEC?K@HEC
Business school research generally goes unnoticed by the professional world; and yet, that research plays a fundamental role in shaping business practices. Since 2008, to narrow the gap between research and companies, HEC Paris has called upon Business Digest’s editorial expertise in the summary, interpretation, and showcasing of economic and management sciences research.

The objective: increase the visibility of scientific works published by teachers and researchers at HEC Paris by adapting them to be more accessible to a public not versed in the codes of academic research (technical jargon, modeling and simulation, and so on). Since its creation, Knowledge@HEC has published over 140 articles showcasing the academic research of teachers and instructors at HEC Paris.

More information about showcasing management research

Knowledge@HEC article: Making Sense of Economic Models

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Economics is not considered the most successful scientific discipline, to say the least. There are various lines of critique of the field, some more justified than others. Two recent research papers attempt to add new angles to this methodological discussion, arguing that economic models can be useful and serve society in ways that differ from the classical view of science.

Researchers in other social sciences, as well as laypeople, often question why economic models analyze the behavior of “homo economicus”, when psychological research shows it to be an unrealistic model. Why are economists relatively unperturbed by the violations of their models’ assumptions in experiments? How can oversimplified and “toy” models be of use in making predictions? These methodological problems have been discussed since the 1950s, most famously by Milton Friedman, and have received more attention in recent decades.

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Based on « Economic Models as Analogies », Economic Journal , signé I. Gilboa, A. Postlewaite, L. Samuelson et D. Schmeidler, 124 (2014), F513-F533 ; « Economics: Between Prediction and Criticism », signé I. Gilboa, A. Postlewaite, L. Samuelson et D. Schmeidler, version mise à jour en 2016.

 

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Mehdi Ramdani
Published by Mehdi Ramdani